Wives in Orbit (single): Difference between revisions
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== Background == | == Background == | ||
The Red Crayola recorded five songs in July 1978. Two were released as the single ''Wives in Orbit.'' Another was a new recording of "[[Hurricane Fighter Plane]]" released as a [[Hurricane Fighter Plane (single)|promotional flexi-disc]] in ZigZag magazine.<gallery mode="packed"> | The Red Crayola recorded five songs in July 1978. Two were released as the single ''Wives in Orbit.'' Another was a new recording of "[[Hurricane Fighter Plane]]" released as a [[Hurricane Fighter Plane (single)|promotional flexi-disc]] in ZigZag magazine. | ||
<gallery mode="packed"> | |||
File:Wives-in-Orbit-button.jpg|Button<ref>https://www.instagram.com/p/BHABpR0y_2X/</ref> | File:Wives-in-Orbit-button.jpg|Button<ref>https://www.instagram.com/p/BHABpR0y_2X/</ref> | ||
File:Wives-in-Orbit-button-John-Cale.jpg|John Cale wearing button<ref>https://x.com/caroline_binnie/status/1820226318543282633</ref> | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Latest revision as of 06:41, 7 August 2024
Wives in Orbit / Yik Yak | |
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Single by The Red Crayola | |
Released | October 13, 1978 |
Recorded | July 17, 1978 |
Studio |
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Label | File:Blank.svg Radar |
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Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Wives in Orbit" | |
2. | "Yik Yak" |
Background
The Red Crayola recorded five songs in July 1978. Two were released as the single Wives in Orbit. Another was a new recording of "Hurricane Fighter Plane" released as a promotional flexi-disc in ZigZag magazine.
Personnel
The Red Crayola
- Mayo Thompson - vocals, guitar, bass
- Jesse Chamberlain - drums, backing vocals
Technical
- The Red Crayola - producer, arranged by
- Doug Bennett - engineer
- Paul Hodsman - engineer
- Nigel Brooke-Harte - assistant engineer
Cover art
Cover by Assorted Images (Malcolm Garrett)
Reviews
Bomp!
March 1979[3]
But check out the Crayola disc, it's not from the reissued album, but rather a new recording done by Mayo Thompson in the UK, backed by various local and NY punks. As one of the last functioning survivors of '60s avant-garde punk, he's managed to plug right into the current trends--this sounds a lot like Devo--and he's got all it takes to become a leader in '80s much. Good one, Radar.